Popular Mulches
Wood chips, cocoa beans or cypress bark all work well for filling trenches.
Trench landscape edging looks great in informal garden settings. Use trench edging as a border around spreading evergreens or groundcovers or in areas where vinyl or other permanent landscape edging material would look too formal and unnatural. You can easily shift it if plants outgrow the bed. An open trench (Photo 1) holds back the adjacent grass better than a trench filled with mulch. But if you prefer a more finished look, fill it with mulch (Photo 2). You’ll have to redig the trench once in a while to keep it neat and to hold back the lawn, but it doesn’t take long and you can add the trimmings to your compost pile. Do you prefer the look of flower bed stones in your landscape? Check out five more of our favorite flower bed edging ideas.
Wood chips, cocoa beans or cypress bark all work well for filling trenches.
Have the necessary tools for this DIY planter edging project lined up before you start—you’ll save time and frustration.
Avoid last-minute shopping trips by having all your materials ready ahead of time. Here’s a list.